Baltic state sending equivalent of annual defense budget to Ukraine

22 Jan, 2026 10:29 / Updated 4 hours ago
Estonia has provided more than €1 billion in support of Kiev’s war effort against Russia in three years, according to the Defense Ministry

Estonia’s military and financial support for Ukraine over the past three years is comparable in scale to the Baltic country’s annual defense spending, according to figures from the Defense Ministry.

The nation has given Ukraine over €1.1 billion ($1.3 billion) in aid since the escalation of the conflict with Russia in February 2022, ERR reported on Wednesday, citing Defense Ministry spokeswoman Ines Edur.

Around €805 million, or around 75% of the total, has been directed toward Kiev’s military needs, including ammunition, equipment, and training soldiers.

A further €370 million has been allocated for humanitarian assistance and development aid, as well as benefits for Ukrainian refugees in Estonia.

The overall aid matches Estonia’s average annual defense budget from 2022 to 2025, estimated at €1.16 billion, and corresponds to around 2.5% of its GDP, which was around €42 billion last year. In September 2025, the Estonian government announced it would allocate a further 0.25% of GDP specifically for Ukraine military aid in 2026.

Estonia, a former Soviet republic, has long worked to cut ties with Russia alongside its Baltic neighbors Latvia and Lithuania, a campaign that has intensified amid the Ukraine conflict.

Tallinn has been one of Ukraine’s top supporters and has pushed for increased defense spending in Europe, citing the supposed threat of a Russian attack – which Moscow has dismissed as baseless fearmongering. Last year, Estonia pledged to permanently raise military spending to at least 5% of GDP, and announced plans to deploy anti-personnel landmines along the border with Russia.

Moscow has warned against military and financial support for Ukraine, saying it prolongs the conflict and undermines peace efforts, and has argued that the EU’s militarization risks a wider European conflict, and that claims of a looming Russian attack are manufactured by politicians to justify soaring defense budgets and distract public attention from domestic problems.

Russia has called the Baltic states “extremely Russophobic” and downgraded diplomatic ties with them in 2023. Last year, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova called Estonia “one of the most hostile countries” and accused it of “spreading myths and falsehoods” about the supposed Russian threat.